rel-tag feedback

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Issues

General Comments

The heavy reliance on IMO poorly-conceived URL structures as "de facto best practice" means that some people who wish to provide a "tag here!" indicator in their markup can't play in your sandbox. A better solution would either take the content of the a tag as the tag, or would permit some sort of pattern-matching specification to point consumers of your tag to the "tag" portion of the URL. See rel-tag-issues. JonathanFeinberg 11:37, 9 Feb 2006 (PST)

I agree with the above. I'd like to implement this tagging microformat, but am unable to because my URL's don't match the restrictions. This doesn't seem to be in the spirit of microformats either, which states that they "intend to solve simpler problems first by adapting to current behaviors and usage patterns". Better to me would be to use the class attribute to tell the browser it is a tag link and the rel attribute to specify the name of the tag, ie class="tag" rel"xxx"PeterDaams 16:01, 18 Jan 2007 (EST)

rel is not available for tags; suppose an author wanted to tag a page with "bookmark", "next" "glossary", etc? Andy Mabbett 03:27, 18 Jan 2007 (PST)

I can see value in using page anchors in the url, href="/mytags/automotive#hybrid". The label/tag differentiation seems to go against the folksonomy ethos of tagging. It is however interesting to know from which tag economy or tag scheme it came from. Taylor

UIDs

UIDs can be used as tags. For example, LSIDs for living organisms; for example the URL:

(An LSID for the Yellow-necked Spurfowl (Pternistis leucoscepus)), could be marked-up using "rel-tag" so that people could tag pages (in blogs, for example) or pictures (on, say, Flickr) of the organism concerned with a tag of:

urn:lsid:ubio.org:namebank:11815

thereby adding discoverability, without reducing or changing any of the current uses of LSIDs.